From: owner-cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca (Cdn-Firearms Digest) To: cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca Subject: Cdn-Firearms Digest V15 #218 Reply-To: cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca Sender: owner-cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca Errors-To: owner-cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca Precedence: normal Cdn-Firearms Digest Thursday, August 16 2012 Volume 15 : Number 218 In this issue: SMALL ARMS SURVEY: What costs USD 8.5 billion and goes BANG? Regional Council wants to keep Ontario gun registry Re: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club hosting Ontario Summer Games event Caledon man charged with gun trafficking RE: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? November's choices -- tough to support either Romney Ryan Re: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 9:41 am From: "Dennis R. Young" Subject: SMALL ARMS SURVEY: What costs USD 8.5 billion and goes BANG? From: Small Arms Survey [mailto:news@smallarmssurvey.org] Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 9:14 AM To: dhyoung@shaw.ca Subject: What costs USD 8.5 billion and goes BANG? What costs USD 8.5 billion and goes BANG? The Small Arms Survey 2012: Moving Targets, to be launched on 27 August at the United Nations headquarters in New York, will provide the latest information on the global authorized trade in small arms, and present new findings on small arms proliferation and armed violence worldwide. A full press release, along with chapter summaries and additional materials, will be released on the Small Arms Survey website at 1 pm Eastern Daylight Time (US) on 27 August. To learn more about these new findings, as well as pioneering research on armed violence, piracy, and state transparency in the arms trade, please visit www.smallarmssurvey.org at that time, or sign up to receive an email announcement. ________________________________________ • To sign up for updates on the Small Arms Survey and our other publications, go to: www.smallarmssurvey.org/de/publications/sign-up.html or email sas@smallarmssurvey.org • For previous editions of the Small Arms Survey: www.smallarmssurvey.org/de/publications/by-type/yearbook.html • Follow Small Arms Survey on Facebook (click ‘like’): www.facebook.com/SmallArmsSurvey • Follow the Small Arms Survey on Twitter: twitter.com/SmallArmsSurvey Small Arms Survey | Avenue Blanc 47 | Geneva, GE 1202, Switzerland ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 9:46 am From: "Dennis R. Young" Subject: Regional Council wants to keep Ontario gun registry CAMBRIDGE TIMES Aug 15, 2012 - 4:58 PM Council wants to keep Ontario gun registry Regional committee hopes province will retain federal data By Ryan Flanagan, Metroland News Services http://www.cambridgetimes.ca/news/local/article/1486060--council-wants-to-keep-ontario-gun-registry The national long-gun registry was axed by the federal government in 2011, but regional councillors are hoping the provincial government can be persuaded to maintain the Ontario portion of the database. The region's community services committee voted Tuesday to formally request that the province retain its gun registry data. Although no councillors voiced disagreement with the idea of retaining the data, some voted against the proposal. "From my perspective, out in a rural township, I probably have as many people that support the elimination of the long-gun registry as people that support the retention of the data," said North Dumfries Mayor Rob Deutschmann, who nonetheless called his decision to vote against the resolution "difficult," but based on a question of jurisdiction. "I don't see how this matter becomes something that we have to deal with here," he said. Deutschmann compared the issue to when a Breslau Public School class provided the catalyst for an attempt to ban shark fin soup in Waterloo Region in 2011. In that case, councillors decided they had no jurisdiction to ban the delicacy, but did ask the federal government to review its position on the issue. Coun. Sean Strickland, who chairs the committee, said a resolution calling on the federal government to maintain the registry was passed in 2010. "I would see this report as somewhat of an extension of that discussion," he said. The idea came from the Waterloo Region Crime Prevention Council, which unanimously asked councillors to look at the issue. The crime prevention council calls the registry "useful as an investigative tool for police and for tracing firearms on a national scale. According to their report, "deleting the data will impede and increase the costs of criminal investigations, as well as diminish police ability to enforce prohibition orders and take preventative actions." The federal government passed the Ending the Long-Gun Registry Act in 2011, after an attempt to do so in 2010 fell to a narrow defeat. Coun. Geoff Lorentz questioned why the resolution only looked to maintain the data for part of the country. "It just seems a little hypocritical that we're trying to protect it for Ontario but nowhere else. Why is the data in Ontario more important than the data in Quebec, Manitoba or Alberta?" he asked. Municipal governments in Toronto and Mississauga have made similar requests of the province, while Quebec's provincial government is attempting to retain the gun registry data for that province. As of September 2011, there were more than 520 licensed firearm owners and nearly 2.4 million firearms registered in Ontario. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 9:47 am From: abernardo343@rogers.com Subject: Re: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? We have much of this info but I'll have to dig into it when I get back from vacation. Tony Sent by BlackBerry - -----Original Message----- From: "Dennis R. Young" Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:30:02 To: Firearms Digest Subject: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? In 2011, 13.7 million hunters in the USA spent $34 billion, an average of $2,484 per hunter. In 2011, 33 million anglers in the USA spent $41.8 billion, an average of $1,262 per angler. THE OUTDOOR WIRE - AUGUST 16, 2012 http://www.theoutdoorwire.com/archived/2012-08-16_tow.html FEATURE: Reversing Decades of Decline, the Number of Hunters and Anglers is on the Rise Salazar: Preliminary Survey Delivers 'Great News for America's Economy and Conservation Heritage' ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 9:57 am From: "Dennis R. Young" Subject: Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club hosting Ontario Summer Games event Durhamregion.com - Aug 16, 2012 - 4:30 AM Ontario Summer Games event comes to Oshawa Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club hosting skeet shooting By Shawn Cayley http://www.durhamregion.com/sports/article/1485813--ontario-summer-games-event-comes-to-oshawa OSHAWA -- Young athletes from across the province will be pulling out the big guns in Durham Region this weekend. The Ontario Summer Games is set to get underway and while most of the events are being held in the Toronto area, the Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club will take centre stage over the next couple of days as hosts of the skeet shooting event. Dan Hardin of the club is also serving as the sport and venue manager for the OSG, and says the club is over the moon at the opportunity to host. "We're delighted. Absolutely delighted. It's important for us a club to host competitions of any kind and because it's a junior competition, it's that much more important," Hardin said in an interview prior to the Games. "Junior athletes are important to any sport." He added that the venue selection was likely an easy choice to make for Games organizers. "Oshawa is a premier club in the province and largest club in Canada. We have well over 800 members so I think the choice was pretty easy for them. In my judgement we have the best field layout ... we're facing north, we're at the top of a hill. It's as little background as anyone would find anywhere. Being a shooter if you want to come to a place to shoot, this is the place," he said. Skeet shooting is a sport that continues to grow its profile across the province. The basis of the game involves shooting down with a shotgun a series of clay skeets -- pigeons or birds as they are referred to -- that are sent airborne from a device called the traps. The course is a semi-circle shape with eight shooting stations. Each shooter is awarded one point for each pigeon they hit. Hardin has been around the sport for years and brings an interesting perspective to the game. Some have labeled it a taboo sport due to the use of guns, but not Hardin. "I'm an older guy, so it might sound a little funny when I say it, but it's the best video game in the world, honest," he said. "It's challenging and it's an appropriate sort of game because you're not pointing a gun at anything but a clay pigeon. "It's like any other sport. The only difference is that instead of a tennis racquet or a golf club, you're holding a shotgun," Hardin added. The event kicks off on Friday with a practice session in the morning followed by an afternoon of shooting. On Saturday there is a full day on the docket, with competition scheduled to run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The two athlete ambassadors are Philip Finlay and Victoria Hardin. Finlay is a 17-year-old student who has been skeet shooting for three years. A member of the Barrie Gun Club, Finlay won the 2011 Ontario junior vhampionship. He shoots a 12 gauge Browning 525. Hardin is a 21 year old who has also been shooting for three years and has a championship standing to her name as the 2011 .410 gauge Ontario open ladies' champion. She is a member of the Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club, she shoots a Winchester 101 three-barrel set (20/28/410) and will be one of two females competing. They join a field of eight others who were chosen through a qualifying process with the OSSA. The Oshawa Skeet and Gun Club is located at 5245 Wilson Rd. off Coates Road and Simcoe Street on the outskirts of north Oshawa. - ------------------------------------- ABOUT SKEET SHOOTING Skeet is an individual sport involving skill, concentration and stamina. The objective of the game is to score by breaking clay discs thrown in the air, shooting them with a shotgun. The field of play is half-moon shaped, with eight shooting stations -- seven equally spaced on the arc, and an eighth placed midway along the baseline between the first and seventh stations. The clay discs are thrown from devices called traps. One trap is located about three metres high on the left margin of the field behind station 1, and the other about one metre off the ground on the right margin behind station 7. Once thrown, the clay disc rises to a height of about five metres at the centre of the field above Station 8. Each competitor's first miss is repeated immediately and is referred to as an option. If no targets are missed during the round, the final or 25th target is taken at the last Station, low 8. A round of skeet is 25 targets, with one point for every disc broken. The competitors are grouped in squads (a maximum of five) and complete eight rounds of skeet for a total of 200 targets. The shotguns used are 12 gauge or smaller and capable of holding two shells for doubles. The rules of gun safety apply at all times. Competitors do not load their shotguns until they are on station to shoot. At all other times, the shotgun is unloaded, with the action open so everyone can see that it is safe. - -- information courtesy www.ontariosummergames.ca SKEET SHOOTING http://ontariosummergames.ca/schedule/eventview/index.html?calendar=skeet-sh ooting SPORTING RIFLE http://ontariosummergames.ca/schedule/eventview/index.html?calendar=sporting - -rifle ARCHERY http://ontariosummergames.ca/schedule/eventview/index.html?calendar=archery - ------------------------------------ OLYMPIC SHOOTING EVENTS http://www.london2012.com/shooting/events/ MEN'S COMPETITION Men's 50m Rifle 3 Positions Men's 50m Rifle Prone Men's 10m Air Rifle Men's 50m Pistol Men's 25m Rapid Fire Pistol Men's 10m Air Pistol Men's Trap Men's Double Trap Men's Skeet WOMEN'S COMPETITION Women's 10m Air Rifle Women's 50m Rifle 3 Positions Women's 25m Pistol Women's 10m Air Pistol Women's Trap Women's Skeet ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 10:03 am From: "Dennis R. Young" Subject: Caledon man charged with gun trafficking Caledon man charged with gun trafficking http://www.caledoncitizen.com/news/2012-08-16/News/Caledon_man_charged_with_gun_trafficking.html A joint investigation conducted by York Regional Police, along with members of the Provincial Weapons Enforcement Unit and OPP, has resulted in the seizure of 10 firearms and the arrest of three men following a trafficking investigation in the Greater Toronto Area. York Regional Police report the joint forces investigation concluded July 21 with the execution of three Criminal Code search warrants in Caledon, Richmond Hill and Oshawa. They resulted in police seizing six handguns, three long guns, one sawed-off shotgun and one conducted energy weapon. Police also seized a small quantity of what is believed to be cocaine. Three men, including a 42-yearold man from Caledon, along with a 44-year-old man from Oshawa and a 26-year-old man from Richmond Hill, were charged with a number of offences, including trafficking in firearms, tampering with a serial number of a firearm, possession of property obtained by crime, unauthorized possession of a weapon, possession of a restricted firearm with ammunition, unsafe storage of a firearm, possession of a controlled substance and breach of recognizance. "The partners who make up the Provincial Weapons Enforcement Unit are again sending a clear, strong message to criminal organizations: Gun smuggling, gun crimes, and any associated, dangerous criminal activities will not be tolerated anywhere in Ontario," said OPP Commissioner Chris Lewis. "This is a highly-successful example of how police agencies work together where matters of public safety go beyond the border of one city or region," said York Regional Police Chief Eric Jolliffe. - --------------------------- Brandon Sun - PRINT EDITION - 16/08/2012 1:00 AM Police looking for guns during raids By: Ian Hitchen http://www.brandonsun.com/local/police-looking-for-guns-during-raids-1663973 26.html?thx=y It was guns that police went looking for on the weekend with a pair of raids at two city homes. On Wednesday, police released a few more details about the Saturday raids and why its Tactical Response Unit was involved. [Login required to view full article.] - --------------------------------- Aug 15, 2012 - 2:52 PM Durham police arrest 28 in drug bust Seven-month investigation leads to 145 criminal charges http://www.durhamregion.com/news/crime/article/1485772--durham-police-arrest - -28-in-drug-bust DURHAM -- Durham Police clinched a seven-month drug trafficking investigation Wednesday morning with multiple arrests across the GTA. Led by the Durham Regional Police gun and gang enforcement unit, Project Kingfisher turned up two loaded handguns and large quantities of cocaine, heroin and marijuana with a street value of more than $430,000. The 28 search warrants police executed on Aug. 15 also turned up a large quantity of cash and 10 vehicles. Durham Police partnered with the Peterborough Lakefield Community Police Service and the OPP biker enforcement unit for the investigation. Members of Toronto, Peel, Kawartha Lakes and Hamilton Police services helped during the warrant processes. Warrants were executed at 12 residences in Durham, eight in Peterborough, five in Toronto, two in Hamilton and one in Lindsay. The 28 arrested without incident are being held for bail hearings and face a total of 145 criminal charges. One arrested is a full member of the Hell's Angels and two are prospect members, police said. Police did not immediately release the names of the accused. Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to contact DRP Guns and Gangs Unit 1-888-579-1520 ext. 5800. Anonymous tips can be made to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or www.durhamregionalcrimestoppers.ca and tipsters may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,000. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 10:08 am From: "Phil Morlock" Subject: RE: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? The problem with these 'decline' stats is they are in direct conflict with business numbers which have steadily increased over the past 20 years. Either anglers and hunters are spending significantly increasing amounts per person per year, or the numbers of participants has been going up - a lot in some cases. Cabela's and Bass Pro and Gander Mountain, etc. have not been opening new stores across the U.S. and in Canada to service a market in decline. These folks do their homework and they know the trends. Government only counts license purchases in a given year - but they tend to for example, omit the 30% or so of the population who are not required to buy a fishing license ( kids, seniors, First Nation), and they fail to include non- compliance which Ontario estimates as 35% on the low end. Those people all buy stuff - but they don't show up in the stats. Phil Phil Morlock Director, Environmental Affairs Shimano American Corp. / Shimano Canada Ltd. Phone -  613 - 637 - 5328 E mail -  pmorlock@shimano.com www.shimano.com - -----Original Message----- From: abernardo343@rogers.com [mailto:abernardo343@rogers.com] Sent: August-16-12 11:47 AM To: Dennis Young; Firearms Digest Cc: Phil Morlock; Bob Bailey Subject: Re: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? We have much of this info but I'll have to dig into it when I get back from vacation. Tony Sent by BlackBerry - -----Original Message----- From: "Dennis R. Young" Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:30:02 To: Firearms Digest Cc: OUTDOORS CAUCUS ASSOCIATION; OUTDOORS NETWORK Subject: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? In 2011, 13.7 million hunters in the USA spent $34 billion, an average of $2,484 per hunter. In 2011, 33 million anglers in the USA spent $41.8 billion, an average of $1,262 per angler. THE OUTDOOR WIRE - AUGUST 16, 2012 http://www.theoutdoorwire.com/archived/2012-08-16_tow.html FEATURE: Reversing Decades of Decline, the Number of Hunters and Anglers is on the Rise Salazar: Preliminary Survey Delivers 'Great News for America's Economy and Conservation Heritage' MILWAUKEE, WI - Highlighting the reversal of decades of declining numbers, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar has announced the preliminary results of a comprehensive national survey of outdoor recreation showing a significant increase in hunters and a double-digit increase in anglers over the past five years. "Seeing more people fishing, hunting, and getting outdoors is great news for America's economy and conservation heritage," said Salazar. "Outdoor recreation and tourism are huge economic engines for local communities and the country, so it is vital that we continue to support policies and investments that help Americans get outside, learn to fish, or go hunting. That is why, through President Obama's America's Great Outdoors initiative, we have been focused on helping Americans rediscover the joys of casting a line, passing along family hunting traditions, and protecting the places they love." ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2012 12:53:41 -0600 From: "Joe Gingrich" Subject: November's choices -- tough to support either Romney Ryan November's choices -- tough to support either Romney-Ryan or Obama-Biden By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano Published August 16, 2012 FoxNews.com We are in terrible straits this presidential election. We have a choice between a president who has posed more of a danger to personal freedom than any in the past 150 years and a Republican team that wants to return to Bush-style big government. President Obama has begun to show his hand at private fundraisers and in unscripted comments during his campaign. And the essence of his revelations is dark. His vision of a shared prosperity should frighten everyone who believes in freedom, because it is obvious that the president doesn't. He believes the federal government somehow possesses power from some source other than the Constitution that enables it to take from the rich and give to the poor. He calls this "a new vision of an America in which prosperity is shared," and he declared, "If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen." Today in America, nearly half of all households receive either a salary or some financial benefit from the government; the other half pay for it. In Obama's vision for America, no one will be permitted to become too rich, no matter his skills and hard work. He somehow believes that government seizures and transfers of wealth generate prosperity. We know, of course, that the opposite occurs. Seizing wealth through taxation removes it from the private sector for investment. That produces job losses and government dependence on a massive scale. The federal government has a debt of $16 trillion. We have that debt because both political parties have chosen to spend today and put the burden of paying for the spending onto future generations. The debt keeps increasing, and the feds have no intention of paying it off. Every time the government has wanted to increase its lawful power to borrow since World War II, members of Congress and presidents from both parties have permitted it to do so. Last week, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, blasted Obama for borrowing more than one trillion dollars in just the past year. He must have forgotten to look at the voting record of his designated running mate, Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan. Ryan voted for nearly every request to raise the debt ceiling during his 14 years in Congress. He voted for TARP, the GM bailout and most of the recent stimulus giveaways. He also voted to pay for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars on a credit card, which added another trillion dollars to the government's debt. And he voted to assault the Constitution by supporting the Patriot Act and its extensions, as well as Obama's unconstitutional proposal to use the military to arrest Americans on American soil and detain those arrested indefinitely. We have a rough idea of how Obama would bring about government control of private industry through ObamaCare and Dodd-Frank. From Ryan's voting record, we have a rough idea of what Romney-Ryan would bring us: more of the Bush-era big government. In other words, Ryan is just another big-government Republican holding himself out as a fiscal conservative. Even his controversial budget proposals -- which the House approved, but the Senate declined to address -- would have increased government spending. It was less of an increase than Obama wanted, which is why the Senate Democrats refused to consider it, but it was not a cut in spending. I am a firm believer that the Constitution means what it says. The federal government can only do what the Constitution authorizes it to do. The modern-day Republican and Democratic Parties have made a shambles of that principle. Nevertheless, I understand the "anybody but Obama" urge among those who fear his excesses, as do I. Obama has killed innocents, altered laws, rejected his oath to enforce the law faithfully, and threatened to assault the liberty and property of Americans he hates and fears. Even though Ryan is a smart and humble and likeable man who was once a disciple of Ayn Rand on economics, as am I, the Republicans want to return to the Bush days of war and spending beyond our means and assaults on civil liberties to return. The Bush years were bad for freedom; without them, we would not have had an Obama administration. Which do you want? Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. His latest is " It is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case for Personal Freedom." ------------------------------ Date: Thu, August 16, 2012 1:52 pm From: "Bob Bailey" Subject: Re: Wonder what these numbers are for Canada? I did a marketing analysis just over 10 years ago which indicated that perhaps as many as one of every two people who hunted waterfowl, did so without a license. When you consider how the price of a deer tag has soared to $45.04 in Ontario, you may be sure that there is a strong incentive to get by without one whenever possible. Price nearly always impacts demand for any commodity, but in the case of fish and wildlife, demand can sometimes be met through other means... and in an era of declining fish and wildlife budgets, and fewer game wardens, there may be an increasing tendency to by- pass the licensing process.... also, as in the case of the Migratory Bird Permit, it is not always easy or even possible to get a license. All of this "off the record" participation and exploitation only serves to reinforce a false perception about the importance of fish and wildlife resources to socio- economic development across the country. Retiring baby boomers now have the time to hunt and fish, and I am meeting folks like these often at boat launches. This is a big demographic, often with money and now time to go back to what they did as kids and young adults. So I think we should predict that participation in these outdoor activities almost has to be increasing..... Also, lots of people who consider themselves to be anglers and hunters don't hunt and/ or fish every year. I know plenty of these folks, they can't do it now because of the job and family, but they still buy clothing and gear at the outdoor shops. Once in a while they get an invitation to go hunting or fishing so they buy a one day license for fishing (did this with someone last weekend and I basically made him buy the license). Increasing fees and overall lack of presence of fish and wildlife agencies can only lead to more people simply willing to take a chance without a license. Where I live down here in rural eastern Ontario, fish and wildlife are a very important contributor to offsetting the grocery bill for low income families and retired folks on low, fixed incomes. I suspect subsistence hunting and fishing is far more prevalent in poor rural communities outside the native community, than many folks might realize. On the positive side, I agree we need the figures on these activities to make the case for government investment in fishing and hunting and the preservation of our outdoor culture. But we do need different kinds of surveys that get at some of the socio- economic questions above. There is some information out there such as the Saskatchewan survey of resident and non resident hunting, and also the 2012 DFO survey of recreational fishing. It would be good to gather all this information for a review, to see what it would tell us and to identify the gaps. I may be in a position at some time in the near future to contribute to that, but not right now. There is a lot of interest in this topic among network participants, and perhaps we can get some momentum going on it and come up with some needs/ recommendations to follow up with governments and others. regards, Bob On ThursdayAug 16 , at 12:08 PM, Phil Morlock wrote: > The problem with these 'decline' stats is they are in direct > conflict with business numbers which have steadily increased over > the past 20 years. Either anglers and hunters are spending > significantly increasing amounts per person per year, or the > numbers of participants has been going up - a lot in some cases. > Cabela's and Bass Pro and Gander Mountain, etc. have not been > opening new stores across the U.S. and in Canada to service a > market in decline. These folks do their homework and they know the > trends. > > Government only counts license purchases in a given year - but they > tend to for example, omit the 30% or so of the population who are > not required to buy a fishing license ( kids, seniors, First > Nation), and they fail to include non- compliance which Ontario > estimates as 35% on the low end. Those people all buy stuff - but > they don't show up in the stats. > > Phil > > Phil Morlock > Director, Environmental Affairs > Shimano American Corp. / Shimano Canada Ltd. > Phone - 613 - 637 - 5328 > E mail - pmorlock@shimano.com > www.shimano.com ------------------------------ End of Cdn-Firearms Digest V15 #218 *********************************** Submissions: mailto:cdn-firearms-digest@scorpion.bogend.ca Mailing List Commands: mailto:majordomo@scorpion.bogend.ca Moderator's email: mailto:owner-cdn-firearms@scorpion.bogend.ca List owner: mailto:owner-cdn-firearms@scorpion.bogend.ca FAQ list: http://www.canfirearms/Skeeter/Faq/cfd-faq1.html Web Site: http://www.canfirearms.ca CFDigest Archives: http://www.canfirearms.ca/archives To unsubscribe from _all_ the lists, put the next four lines in a message and mailto:majordomo@scorpion.bogend.ca unsubscribe cdn-firearms-digest unsubscribe cdn-firearms-chat unsubscribe cdn-firearms end (To subscribe, use "subscribe" instead of "unsubscribe".)